Words with Root “concentr-” in English (US)
Browse English (US) words sharing the root “concentr-”, complete with pronunciations, syllable breakdowns, and linguistic insights.
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5
Root
concentr-
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5 words
concentr- From Latin *concentrare* (to bring together); core meaning of increasing concentration.
The word 'haemoconcentration' is divided into six syllables: hae-mo-con-cen-tra-tion. It's a noun derived from Greek and Latin roots, with primary stress on the fifth syllable. Syllabification follows vowel-consonant and consonant cluster division rules, with the 'ae' digraph presenting a pronunciation exception.
Hemoconcentration is a noun with six syllables (he-mo-con-cen-tra-tion). The primary stress falls on the penultimate syllable. It's formed from the Greek prefix 'hemo-', the Latin root 'concentr-', and the Latin suffix '-ation'. Syllabification follows standard English rules, respecting vowel-consonant and consonant-vowel-consonant patterns.
Nonconcentrativeness is a six-syllable noun (non-con-cen-tra-tive-ness) with primary stress on 'tra' and secondary stress on 'non' and 'con'. It consists of the negation prefix 'non-', the Latin root 'concentr-', and the suffixes '-ate', '-ive', and '-ness'. Syllabification follows morpheme boundary rules for affixes and the maximal onset principle for the 'cen-tra' division where 'tr' is a legal onset cluster.
The word 'nonconcentrically' is divided into six syllables: non-con-cen-tri-cal-ly. The primary stress falls on the third syllable ('cen'). It's an adverb formed from a prefix, root, and two suffixes, following standard English syllable division rules based on vowel-onset patterns and permissible consonant clusters.
The word 'unconcentrically' is divided into six syllables: un-con-cen-tri-cal-ly. It consists of the prefix 'un-', the root 'concentr-', and the suffix '-ically'. The primary stress falls on the fourth syllable ('cal'). Syllable division follows standard English rules based on vowel-consonant patterns.